The pro-democracy group Indivisible is among those
speaking out against the Trump administration’s reported targeting of
progressive and liberal organizations with various government agencies,
including the FBI and IRS, as part of what critics call an “authoritarian
playbook” by President Donald Trump that
seeks to criminalize dissent, chill free speech, and frame nonviolent protest
and opposition as “domestic terrorism.”
In-depth reporting by Reuters named Trump’s
far-right, xenophobic White House advisor Stephen Miller as “playing a central
role” in the internal effort to wield the power of federal agencies at a
variety of organizations that the administration claims—contrary to all
available evidence—are funding or orchestrating violent protests and political
attacks.
Granted anonymity to speak more freely about the internal
mechanics of the operation, Reuters’ reporting is based on
discussions with “three White House officials, four Department of Homeland
Security officials and one Justice Department official to produce the first
comprehensive account of how decisions are being made, forces deployed, and
operations coordinated in the crackdown.”
“Trump wants to scare people away from exercising
their constitutional rights. We won’t let him succeed. Don’t let this smear
distract you. The best response to attacks on our rights is to exercise our
rights. That means showing up in huge numbers on October 18.”
According to Reuters, “Miller is deeply
involved in reviewing government agencies’ investigations into the financial
networks behind what the administration labels ‘domestic terror networks,’
which include nonprofits and even educational institutions, a White House
official said.”
In response to [a Reuter's request], the White House
highlighted seven political protests in 2023 and 2025 that included acts of
violence directed against law enforcement officials, and two incidents of
vandalism at Tesla dealerships this year as well as half a dozen social media
posts celebrating the damage.
It named nine liberal groups, donors or fundraising organizations that it said
helped finance or plan protests where the violent incidents occurred.
While the second White House official stressed that the organizations were not
necessarily potential targets, the material provides insight into the
administration's thinking. The list includes Soros' Open Society Foundations;
ActBlue, the funding arm of the Democratic Party; Indivisible, a grassroots coalition
opposed to Trump policies and the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights, a Los
Angeles-based group. "The goal is to destabilize Soros’ network," a third White House
official said.
In a statement, a spokesperson for Soros’s network of charitable organizations rejected any claim by Trump or the White House officials that its operations have anything to do with violent conduct or promoting violence. “Neither George Soros nor the Open Society Foundations fund protests, condone violence, or foment it in any way,” the spokesperson said. “Claims to the contrary are false.”
Other groups named by the White House officials were two
Jewish-led advocacy groups, IfNotNow and Jewish Voice for Peace, both of which
have organized protests and nonviolent sit-ins to oppose the genocide in Gaza being carried out by
the US-backed Israeli government.
Citing the Reuters reporting, Indivisible co-founder Ezra Levin said in a social media thread Thursday night that the fact a looming crackdown on groups opposed to Trump and his far-right agenda is coming less than two weeks before “before the largest peaceful protest in modern American history is absolutely intentional.”
On October 18, massive
protests are planned nationwide as a follow-up to the “No Kings” day of action
that took place in June, bringing an estimated one million people into the
streets against the Republican Party’s authoritarian lurch under Trump.
According to Reuters, “Miller is taking a
‘hands-on’ role in investigating the funding of nonprofits and educational
institutions and is sharing recommendations from Attorney General Pam Bondi and
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent with Trump and other top advisers,” as well as
sharing information with the joint terrorism task force.
“We don’t have all the details, but it appears Trump’s
regime is gearing up to smear us with ludicrous accusations that we’re somehow
tied to violence at protests—a claim that’s as false as it is predictable,”
said Levin. “Let’s call this what it is: A baseless attempt to chill free
speech and scare people away from exercising their constitutional right to
protest an authoritarian regime. We have been committed to nonviolence from the
very beginning. It’s a core principle, not just a talking point.”
“We will not back down,” Levin said in the post. “Trump
and Miller can lie, smear, and threaten all they want. They will lose.”
“By floating false allegations of violence,” he
concluded, “Trump wants to scare people away from exercising their
constitutional rights. We won’t let him succeed. Don’t let this smear distract
you. The best response to attacks on our rights is to exercise our rights. That
means showing up in huge numbers on October 18.”
Jon
Queally, Jon Queally is managing editor of Common Dreams.
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